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Iliad Dialectical Journals

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Title: Iliad Dialectical Journals


1
Iliad Dialectical Journals
  • Overall views. Some were awesome and, with
    permission from the authors, will be used to
    model journals for future classes.
  • Showed detailed analysis, clever commentary and
    made me smile!

2
Most were in the high B to A- range.
  • Moments of scholarly insight but other times
    flavored with Ive got to get this done
    interpretation.

3
Some were an exercise in meeting the basics of
the assignment.
  • The god-like son of Peleus wanted to win that
    glory for himself (68).
  • Everyone wants glory. And glory can be obtained
    for many reasons.

Generic response. Uses an untouchable. Could
apply to anything.
4
Expand, analyze, probe
  • The god-like son of Peleus wanted to win that
    glory for himself (68).
  • The epithet , god-like, appears often throughout
    the Iliad, usually to define a great fighter,
    illustrating the Greeks obsession with that
    skill.

Analyze the literary devices used in the text.
5
Add an analysis of the Greek culture.
Applied to my own life and made an allusion to
the Bible.
  • The epithet , god-like, appears often throughout
    the Iliad, usually to define a great fighter,
    illustrating the Greeks obsession with that
    skill. In contrast to my view of a loving and
    forgiving God who preaches to turn the other
    cheek in the presence of violence, the greek gods
    were capricious and used the warriors as their
    own pawns in a game of war. It didnt seem to
    matter whose cause was the most valiant, only who
    fought with the most skill.

Used a vocabulary word.
6
Watch voice
  • Even in academic journalingwatch kicking into
    casual voice. Loses credibility.
  • Excellent
  • I did not come here because the Trojans have
    injured me (Achilles 48).
  • Achilles had gone to aid his friend Menelaus.
    Its almost like the phrase the enemy of my
    enemy is my friend except that in this case it
    would be reversed to my friend's enemy is my
    enemy. The Greek men are honor bound to defend,
    not only their own homes, but the homes of their
    friends and countrymen as well.

7
Poor voice
  • This is probably the goriest act thourhgout the
    Iliad and I really hate Achilles all the more
    because of it. Youd think this would bring down
    someones honor-gage unless Hector had personally
    dishonored them. I guess it would be Okay then.
    (Okay, okay, I really dont think that ?).
  • Then dont write it!

8
Response
  • Once a child becomes an orphan, she continued,
    his friends leave him. With a bowed head and
    tears on his cheeks, he approaches his fathers
    friends, tugging at their coats. The one who
    pities him will offer him a cup for a moment,
    enough to wet his lips but not enough to fill his
    mouth. And a child whose parents still live
    strikes him and pushes him away from the table
    saying Go away! No father of yours is eating
    with us! So the needy child tearfully returns to
    his widowed mother. Poor Astyanax, who has known
    only the best of love and care ! (72)

9
Analysis
  • Homer cuts from the scenes of manly men to a
    touching interaction between wife, son and
    father. Andromache pleads with Hector to think
    of his family, and gives insight into the role of
    the man as head of the household. Even though
    one talks of a Greek hero, abandoning women and
    children upon the death of the male leader is not
    heroic at all. Hector chooses death so that he
    can die with honor, but leaves his family to live
    in poverty and despair. Andromache will be taken
    captive as a prize of honor, separated from her
    baby and treated as a slave. There is no honor
    in abandoning your family.

10
Writers workshop
  • Read the directions!
  • Save timecut extra words like, In this passage
    the writer discusses.
  • Apply the literature terms (heroic hero, arete,
    Homeric simile
  • Identify a theme to develop. It will help with
    organization. This year we look at the Heros
    Journey. How do the Iliad characters measure up
    to your definition of a Hero.
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